Cheryl Lu-Lien Tan

Author Website

  • Home
  • Bio
  • Books
  • Events
  • Work
  • Blog
  • Contact

August 26, 2012 By cheryl

Easy Asian Tuna Salad: A Simple Keeper

A few months ago, I pledged on this blog that I’d be better about writing my own recipes down.

Sure, I’ve proven that I’m pretty adept at writing others’ recipes down. But when it comes to my own, dishes that I whip up with ingredients yanked willy-nilly from the fridge often don’t get reproduced for a simple reason: By the time the meal’s over, I’ve already forgotten what exactly it was that I did. (I’m still mourning the delicious tender beef in Sichuan peppercorn-soy sauce stew that I threw together recently and have no idea how to replicate.)

And so here’s another installment — for a dish so easy I actually think blogging about it is pretty silly. But hey, a pledge is a pledge. So if you want to learn about the Asian-inflected tuna salad I make at home, read on …

[Read more…]

Filed Under: American, Asian, Fish, Recipes Tagged With: Asian, Baltimore, Cilantro, Nina's Espresso Bar, Recipe, Sesame oil, The Baltimore Sun, Tuna Salad

April 18, 2011 By cheryl

Braised Brisket: Seder a La Singapore

Sometimes, one just needs a good muse to get the juices flowing.

In my case, that would be a certain brisket I spied recently once the cut of meat began flooding butchers with Passover on the horizon. Now this was a beautiful five-pounder with an impressive girth, hearty red hue and slick coating of fat. Thoughts of what I might do to it washed over me instantly — something conventional, perhaps? Or a return to the trusty sweet and sour brisket recipe I’ve hauled out time and again? And then I thought of my Auntie Alice’s Singapore-style braised duck recipe and how unforgettable that soy sauce gravy inflected with ginger, garlic and five spice powder is.

In recent weeks, I’ve spoken often of how one shouldn’t be intimidated by Southeast Asian recipes — yes, it’s a less usual form of cooking than you would see in most American kitchens. The ingredient lists can be long and the sometimes numerous steps can be mind-boggling. But if you love the flavors, try to understand and dissect them, I’ve been saying in book appearances and interviews — and then adapt those techniques and spice strategies to everyday dishes in your own kitchen.

Faced with my brisket, I thought perhaps I should heed my own advice. My auntie’s braising strategy works wonderfully on duck — so why not beef? Armed with a bagful of garlic, ginger and an onion, I was ready to give it a shot …

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Asian, Chinese, Holidays, Recipes, Teochew Tagged With: Asian, Beef, Bolognese, Braised, Brisket, Chinese, Fat Duck, Garlic, Ginger, Heston Blumenthal, House, Onion, Passover, Seder, Singapore, Southeast Asian, Star Anise, Teochew, TV

August 3, 2009 By cheryl

Xie Xie: A Little Lost In Translation


CIMG7862

Working my way through the Vietnamese fish sandwich at Xie Xie, the newest addition to the New York Asian sandwich scene, a phrase kept ringing through my head: “I’m not seeing the forest for the trees.”

In this case, it was the fact that two thick layers of dill, paired with a slender portion of turmeric-seasoned fish, ended up being so overwhelming that it was hard to get a sense of the sandwich as a whole.

All you truly noticed was that you had a mouth full of dill. (And a lot of bread.)

As for the fish — which is the star of chaca la vong, the heady dill- and turmeric-scented Hanoi dish that this $8.75 sandwich was modeled and named after — that can be a little hard to detect after wading through all that dill and starch.

Which is not to say that Xie Xie isn’t worth checking out. 

[Read more…]

Filed Under: New York, Restaurants Tagged With: Asian, Basil mayonnaise, BBQ, Beef, Carrot, Century Eggs, Chaca la vong, Chinese, Dill, Fish, Hanoi, Ice-Cream Sandwich, Jean-Georges, Kim Chee, Mandarin, New York, Sandwich, Turmeric, Vietnamese, Xie Xie, Yum Cha

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2

Copyright © 2025 CHERYL LU-LIEN TAN · Site design: Ilsa Brink